What are you spending on vacation next year..

We budget about 10k a trip a year. Disney 5K and other trips are random!

I could do some serious damage with 10k. I spent about 5500 in May then another 350 at Disney last week. We got some extra pixie dust and got upgraded for free. Plus a little extra food (we brought our food), and whatever gas was.
 
I would love to go to Japan!

9 days in Japan - Kyoto, Hakone and Tokyo, with day trips to a few other places like Hiroshima.

I'm expecting to spend around $5000 for 2 - but that's with our airfare and all but two nights hotel for free (very kind sister is covering those with points). That money will cover the hotel for 2 nights, Japan Rail passes, misc other train and subway tickets, food, activities, pet boarding, parking and souvenirs. It's amazing how expensive even "free" trips can be!!!
 
3k is a very healthy Disney budget especially when you can split costs.

Disney trip in May: Looking at a max budget of $3000. My split of the hotel and tickets was $1184.16. Then we will have the drive, including hotel and food for a single night on the way down (hotel should be about $50 for my split plus $50 for food that day), gas for both legs, and food for the way back. Then I need money for food and spending while at Disney. I think I can do it for less then $3k.

Gen Con in August: All I need money wise is the badge ($110), parking ($75ish), events ($40ish), and food/spending money. I love near Indianapolis so I just drive in so luckily I don't have to pay for a hotel.
 
We have done a Disney trip, the last week of January into February. The weather was perfect. And it snowed at home which made it that much better :)

I treat spending money on vacations like other people spend money on things. I would rather travel than buy stuff. And I cannot go a year without a vacation, so I make sure that we budget for that. We also want to travel as much as possible before we decide whether or not we want to have kids!

We are looking at the 7 nt. British Isles cruise on the Disney Magic in September. Even with an interior room, we are obviously looking at a few thousand between the cruise and flights. DH and I are cruise veterans (just got married on 1 a month ago!), but never with Disney. DH has also never been to Europe and I'm dying to go back, so seems like a win-win.

I'd also like to sneak in a shorter, cheaper cruise or a cheap Disney trip in Jan/Feb. Winters can be miserable here, and that combined with it being the off-season, I can usually work it out. I rationalize it by us not technically getting a honeymoon as we had 30 friends/family members on our wedding cruise!
 


Bali is on my bucket list. Just everything about it is cool.

5 kid free nights in Bali or New Zealand at this stage, our 10th anniversary. If we can get a good deal on flights to somewhere else within a good flight time for a short trip we might change but time and cost are the main factors. Looking at $2k all up.

We had 2 big trips this year and a big one in 2019 to save for, if it weren't for our anniversary we wouldn't be going anywhere!
 
I want to Disney with you. We are values all the way :)

Hmm, I have no idea. I am not one to budget. But I do try to optimize our money & get discounts when I can. DH & I go to WDW once or twice a year. Next year we had planned for early May & early to mid September (that one will be for our 40th anniversary). We usually stay at YC club level. We will be at DW in December & I will book bounceback reservations for both trips then (hopefully.) I also just renewed our APs so tickets are taken care of. We will renew our Tables in Wonderland card in December also.

I have our May flights booked already, less than 300 for DH & mine on points. I am going to to have DH apply for the SW credit cards in a few weeks & earn the companion pass for 2018 & 19 in early January. Then I could cancel my flights with the points & fly free. After that DH will have 120000 points to use for the next several trips & I can fly with him for free.

So our biggest costs will be hotel & food. I won't know the hotel will cost til I get there & book the bouncenbacks. We do like signature restaurants but the TIW will help with hat plus I will have Disney credit card rewards also. We don't drink but will probably spend about 1200 for meals each trip. Maybe more, depends on how much prices increase next year. We really don't get many souvenirs, maybe a tshirt or 2. Oh, and once in awhile, a Disney Dooney & Bourke. :rolleyes1

That was the plan til today. Disney just announced they are having the Disney After Dark event again this winter. I just talked with DH. Looks like we'll be doing a quick 3 night trip to attend that. I will book a moderate room for that one. Probably move my flights on points to cover that trip & plan to use the companion pass in May for my flight. Would again have to pay for DH but at this point, both flights would be less than 250 for him. So all in that trip would be about 1200 + food.
 
Niagara Falls and a quick drive into Canada are also on the list. We can head from TN to the falls and Canada, then head east to Maine to camp. Then to cape cod to camp more. We did Maine and cape cod a couple of years back but we were limited in what we could do. This time we'd go when it's warmer, and not take extra people.

2 trips - 1 planned, 1 not...planned budget for all yearly travel is $8K for 6, but $1K of that is saved for trips home to my mom, so I'm planning $7K - I do best value vacations, or as I say "best bang for my buck":)...

1st trip - Pittsburgh (grandparent visit)/Niagara Falls CA/Columbus, OH (Game Convention) - 10 days/9 nights...
Hotel - we are staying at an Embassy Suites at all 3 locations - we used points for 1/2 the cost, so we are paying $660 total, but even full cost would only be $1320, since we are doing Sun-Wed in Canada (and the difference in June cost between weekends and weekdays was monumental:))...
Gas/Parking/Tolls - $400 (this is way too high, but it's buffer)
Game Con Badges/Tickets - $250
Canada Attractions Passes (the 4 attraction ones) - $300ish (we'll see next year)
Canada Dinner Theater - $200ish (we'll see next year)
Canada Extra (Souvies, Groupons, etc) - $200
Groceries (picked up in Pburgh for Canada and Columbus for CON) - $125 (light lunches in case breakfast is too light, snacks, drinks)
Dinners for 7 nights (grandparents have 1st dinner bought, dinner theater will be 2nd dinner bought) - 1/2 fast food/1/2 casual sit down - $500 (no alcohol, since we'll have it at the hotel each night)
Ohio Extra (Souvies, Random) - $100
Total Budget OOP - $2735 - rounding to $2750

So, I'm trying to plan a week long trip elsewhere, and I've got a little over $4K...and I'm waffling on where else we should go and when we should go...there are lots of ideas floating here, but nothing I've pulled the trigger on...
 


Christmas at Disney is wonderful. We loved the candlelight processional.

We typically do one year Disney, one year smaller trips. We're doing back to back years this December because we wanted to try Christmas at Disney. It's a little over $4,000.

2018 is a smaller-trip year:

Feb weekend trip to indoor waterpark--$500
Spring weekend trip to cabin/hiking---$400
Spring trip for DS13 to Washington DC w/school---$800
Summer weekend trip to my hometown---$200 or $300
Summer weekend trip to neighboring city---$500
Fall weekend trip to cabin/hiking---$400
 
We are thinking about food and wine too. We went for just a few minutes last Tuesday. It was painful without my snack credits. I am cheap and apparently can't spend real money on bites of deliciousness.

I haven't started detailed budgets yet. Next year is going to be a budget-buster because some of these trips aren't negotiable and it is more traveling than I normally do in a year. We've got one kid's belated graduation trip, college visits for another, and a cross-country journey to carry out my father's burial wishes - nothing that can be easily put off.

Right now, the plans are Disney in March with DS & his SO, NYC and Ithaca for college tours in April, renting a cabin for our annual fair week in July, a cross-country road trip in July/Aug, and if there is still enough room to breathe, hopefully an anniversary Food & Wine trip for just DH & I in Sept. since 2018-19 will be our last school year with our older kids at home and available to watch our youngest. All together, we're looking at about $15,000 and 50+ nights away from home in 2018. That's not counting DD16's exchange program in Japan, which is a reasonable (IMO) $3750 plus airfare for 8 weeks.
 
I just googled Banff, I love it.

We are doing Banff/Lake Louise in March/April, Niagara Falls /Toronto in June and WDW in August.

In 2019, we are doing Salt Lake City /Utah National Parks /Las Vegas in April and WDW and DCL cruise in August.
 
Have you been to Vegas? Our western roadtrip that he wants a little camper, was going to make a stop there. We were doing Tennessee, to diamond crater, to armarillo, to Grand Canyon, to Vegas, to all sorts of CA state parks, back through Salt Lake on the way home. We have been to Vegas but I thought I could take the kid to see cirque.

We will be doing WDW in August. We went in 14, then 16, so figure we'll try to keep the every other year thing going. Don't how much we'll spend. Usually seems to be around $7,000.

Not sure, but will probably go to the Outer Banks late April/Early May. It's cheaper that time of year, but the weather is usually nice. If that's what we end up doing, I'd say around $2,000 for the week.

I may also look into the Grand Canyon, but probably not until 2019 since we are doing WDW. We had a trip planned last winter to fly into Vegas and stay there a couple nights. Then pick up a rental, and stay at a Grand Canyon hotel a night. Stop at Flagstaff and sightsee the next night, then move onto Sedona for 2 nights. From there we were going to spend a night in Glendale (to see the Penguins play the Coyotes), then fly out of Phoenix. I think it was going to be about $4,000 (although that isn't counting gambling, and the hotel in Vegas would've been free). It was really a great sounding trip to us. Unfortunately it just didn't end up working out because of work, but I'm sorry it never did. Would probably skip the Vegas part if we go here though.

Will probably take a couple little trips here and there too. We live a couple hours from Erie PA, so sometimes we head up for a night in the summer ($300). We try to get to Atlantic City a couple times a year (depends on how much gambling I do, but maybe $700 for food/gas/tolls). My nephew lives in Virginia so we may head there for a 2/3 nights ($700, but we don't usually do any kind of sight seeing, just get a hotel with a pool). We won't do all this, but these are just some the the littler things we do. Unfortunately, this year we haven't been able to do any of those little trips. We did Colorado (which was awesome) and the Outer Banks, but haven't had the extra money to do any of the little trips. I had a great time on those trips, but miss my little getaways.
 
You can normally save about $20 on sea world passes by getting them online :)

Next week 2 nights in two cabins at the State Park for DDs 16th birthday. Myself and 6-8 teenage girls. $220 for the cabins plus food maybe $200?

Next month weekend on the coast in NH for 4 (DH and I and two teens). Best Western $110. Food $200. Entertainment and shopping $200.

Numerous soccer tournaments in the spring. Hotels $100-$200 per night plus food. Number of tournaments requiring overnights varies.

Orlando 10 nights in April for 4 people. Airfare $520 (return flight booked on points). Rental car $355. 3 nights at Universal Royal Pacific $840. Parking $60. Universal 4 day 3 park tickets $900. Wyndham Bonnet Creek 7 nights in a 2 bedroom $860. Discovery Cove/ Sea World/Aquatica/Busch Gardens tickets $800. Groceries and restaurants $1000. Total $5335.
 
I would like to make the shift to trips for Christmas presents. The kid never wants anything, and doesn't use what she does get.

It's been an odd year vacation-wise for us. Next year will be odd as well.

We didn't do a big family trip in 2017. We traveled - but not for "vacation." My husband travels for work a lot, and we sometimes get to tag along and/or go to help out. We RARELY get away without the kids, but it's happened three times this year, although for work trips each time. Minimal cost to us - mostly kenneling the dog, some food, and some childcare.

The kids and I also spent time at my parents' (where they also stayed during one of our trips). It's like going to "camp" to stay at my Mom & Dad's. Ha! But the trip to my parents' costs about $500 just in gas, eating on the road, and other misc. travel expenses (sometimes kenneling the dog).

Our 2017 vacation budget was funneled toward my son & husband's father/son trip for our son's 10th birthday "rite of passage" type of trip. Our son got to pick any destination he wanted, and he chose the Grand Canyon. They flew, rented a car, went on some spectacular tours, and spent a day riding roller coasters in Phoenix. It was a fabulous trip for them, and all included cost around $3200.

For 2018 - We're surprising the kids with a quick trip to Universal in January. We decided not to travel to our parents' for Thanksgiving or Christmas, so we're using that travel $ to put toward the trip. We're also giving the kids spending money as a gift at Christmas. We're surprising them with the entire trip on Christmas morning, so they'll get their spending $ and a t-shirt to wear in the parks along with the surprise. We were able to use CC points for most of the flights (making the flight and rental car the same out of pocket as driving - or less), CC points for a good portion of the hotel, and 3 days for the price of 2 at Universal. With kenneling the dog, food, etc, I'm planning on this trip costing around $3500 max. My son is now a "theme park adult", so that's a bit of sticker shock when it comes to buying tickets now.

It's also our 20th anniversary, so DH and I are taking an adults only trip to Disney. We're planning to fly, get a rental car, stay at Contemporary (RO discount, with POFQ or CSR as back ups if the budget just isn't there), UT park hoppers, and will pay transportation for my Mom to come watch the kids. We're saving CC points and Disney CC Rewards, air miles, and rental car points. If we have to pay for everything out of pocket, we're looking at $6500, but I know we'll do better than that.
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I like camping a lot. I know a lot of people don't enjoy roughing it, but we have a 20x 10 tent and all the gear. Heck I even have an AC for it!
We did Disney and Universal twice in 2017.
Next year is one big trip, but will be cheaper. We are using all of dh's vacation time for a 3 week cross country trip. We are driving out west to the Alberta Badlands, Banff, Lake Louise, Jasper and Yoho, and driving back through the U.S. On the return trip we will be stopping in Glacier National Park and driving the Going to the Sun road. We are camping almost exclusively with plans to stay in a hotel every 5th night to do laundry and sleep in a real bed.
Our son is 13 and we think this is the perfect age for an epic road trip. He's really excited.

That will be the only trip for 2018 (other than cottage weekends) so the budget is around 3500-4000 including all food and activities.

The idea being thrown around for 2019 is a trip to the UK for 10-12 nights with a concentration on London.
 
I am waiting until Black Friday to buy everything Sea World related, but can't count on anything. If not, our best discount will be from Dh's union. We will be buying Discovery Cove tickets that include Sea World, Aquatica and Busch Gardens for 14 days.
 
Have you been to Vegas? Our western roadtrip that he wants a little camper, was going to make a stop there. We were doing Tennessee, to diamond crater, to armarillo, to Grand Canyon, to Vegas, to all sorts of CA state parks, back through Salt Lake on the way home. We have been to Vegas but I thought I could take the kid to see cirque.

No, never been there. Someday, but if we did go out that way the more I think about it I'd rather spend the time in Arizona. Your road trip sounds fun!
 
Ah, but you CAN replicate that Vatican tour on your own, at least, if it is the one that I'm thinking of. Guided after-hours private tour for a group of up to 20 guests, led by a member of museum staff, around 4 hours inside the buildings? The Vatican Visitors' Office offers that tour, and though the price varies depending upon the season, it starts at around $350 for the tour itself, with additional charges for the extra guests. It can be a bit difficult to find an available date, but on nearly a year's notice, shouldn't be impossible.

The Louvre Scavenger Hunt (and also one at the British Museum) is available through THATMuse; it normally runs about 50 Euro per adult with a minimum party of 3.

If you like package tours, of any "star" level, then by all means do them; you don't have to defend that choice. I was merely pointing out to other readers that creating a trip to Europe that specifically caters to the interests of children is very possible on a much smaller budget than the one you named. I have family in Europe, we've always taken the children, and we've always managed to do things that they appreciate without breaking the bank too badly.

BTW, in London I would consider a tour of the Cabinet War Rooms or a visit to the Imperial War Museum if that isn't in your package. Also, a boat ride down to Greenwich and a pub lunch there is a nice relaxing way to spend time: https://londonist.com/london/drink/best-family-friendly-pubs-in-south-london

Have a lovely time.

That's good to know! It doesn't change our current plans--I like the idea of touring, even if I'm a tad uncomfortable with the 5-star aspect. That's more because I'm just not a 5-star person, neither is my family. Weird, I know--you'd think I'd be dying to live the good life, at least for a little while! But, I'm not particularly interested in doing all the legwork to come up with a similar tour/group of activities, and then have to do all the coordination and handle all the tickets and transportation and so forth. Maybe in the future, as I become more accustomed to international travel, I would feel competent to take that on. And it's good to know that such options are available, I would have had no idea you could hunt truffles in Umbria or do a Harry Potter tour in London. You can probably tell, I'm not a very experienced traveller!

But, here's the thing--DS20 isn't going on this trip because he's in school. Having done the "standard" Vatican Tour, I know that he wouldn't be able to handle it--he has anxiety and depression, and is off-the-scale introverted. So, I have promised him that, if he ever finds himself in Rome, that I will pay for him to do an after-hours tour of the Vatican. Because it's just too amazing to miss, and he would struggle mightily on the standard one.

Anyway, I do appreciate the information. From here on out, we have a large pot of money dedicated to travel, so I know in the future I'll be looking for interesting places to go and things to see.
 
Next month I'm going to Iceland for 4 nights with a friend:
Ticket: ~$500 (snagged it on sale)
My half of air bnb:~$300
My half of rental car/tours/admissions: ~$800
Food--my only real question mark, we have a kitchen so will likely eat breakfast at home, but otherwise food will likely be expensive

So about $1600 + food

Next summer I'm tentatively planning to take my 2 kids to California for about a week. We'll do a few days at Sequoia and a few days at Disneyland. Budgeting about $3700 total.
 

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